Modeling polarization for Hyper-NA lithography tools and masks
Kafai Lai, Alan E. Rosenbluth, et al.
SPIE Advanced Lithography 2007
Materials that effectively separate charge and spin currents are key to advancing spin-orbit torque-based switching devices for nanomagnet memory. NiO, an insulating yet spin-conducting material, is essential in such systems. Interfacing NiO with a heavy metal like Pt, confines charge current to Pt while allowing spin current to pass through NiO into an adjacent NiFe layer. Introducing a spin-transparent Cu layer between NiO and Py prevents exchange interactions, transmits spin torque, and ensures a uniform magnetic environment at the Py interface, ensuring device reliability. To study spin-current conduction, we use dc bias-dependent spin-torque ferromagnetic resonance (ST-FMR) on nanobridges patterned from a Pt/NiO/Cu/NiFe stack with varying NiO thickness. Results show that a highly spin-transparent (93%) Cu spacer enables >40% spin-current transmission through defect-free NiO/Cu bilayers for NiO thicker than 1.5 nm. This stack demonstrates effective charge-spin separation and flexibility, with seamless spin-torque conversion from magnonic to electronic transport, enabling new spin-current-based device designs.
Kafai Lai, Alan E. Rosenbluth, et al.
SPIE Advanced Lithography 2007
Lawrence Suchow, Norman R. Stemple
JES
Biancun Xie, Madhavan Swaminathan, et al.
EMC 2011
R.D. Murphy, R.O. Watts
Journal of Low Temperature Physics